Method of forming a cylinder liner
10107227 ยท 2018-10-23
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F02F1/004
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
C22C38/002
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
F02F2200/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B24B33/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
F02F1/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
C22C38/12
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B24B33/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A cylinder liner is disclosed, the cylinder liner having a smoother internal surface of an internal side than known cylinder liners. The internal surface having at least one of a reduced peak height of (Rpk) of ?0.25 ?m, a core roughness (Rk) of about 0.2 ?m to about 0.6 ?m, a reduced valley depth (Rvk) of about 1.2 ?m to about 2.5 ?m, a material ratio (Mr1) of ?10%, and a material ratio (Mr2) of about 70% to about 90%.
Claims
1. A process for forming a cylinder liner comprising the steps of: providing a formed cylinder liner having an internal sidewall with an internal surface having a roughness; rough honing the internal surface of the cylinder liner so that the internal surface has a roughness less than the roughness of the formed cylinder liner; finish honing the internal surface of the cylinder liner so that the internal surface has a roughness less than the roughness of the rough honed cylinder liner; honing the internal surface of the cylinder liner so that the internal surface has a roughness less than the roughness of the finish honed cylinder liner and a reduced peak height of (Rpk) of ?0.25 ?m and a reduced valley depth (Rvk) of about 1.2 ?m to about 2.5 ?m, wherein wherein the cylinder liner is formed of a metal or metal alloy and the internal sidewall having the internal surface is formed of the same metal or metal alloy.
2. The process for forming a cylinder liner of claim 1, wherein the internal surface of the honed cylinder liner has a cross hatch pattern formed therein.
3. The process for forming a cylinder liner of claim 1, wherein the internal surface of the honed cylinder liner has a core roughness (Rk) of about 0.2 ?m to about 0.6 ?m.
4. The process for forming a cylinder liner of claim 1, wherein the internal surface of the honed cylinder liner has a material ratio (Mr1) by an intersecting line which separates the protruding peaks from the roughness core profile in a roughness analysis of ?10%.
5. The process for forming a cylinder liner of claim 1, wherein the internal surface of the honed cylinder liner has a material ratio (Mr2) determined by an intersecting line which separates the valleys from the roughness core profile in a roughness analysis of about 70% to about 90%.
6. The process for forming a cylinder liner of claim 5, wherein the internal surface of the honed cylinder liner has a material ratio (Mr1) by an intersecting line which separates the protruding peaks from the roughness core profile in a roughness analysis of ?10%.
7. The process for forming a cylinder liner of claim 6, wherein the internal surface of the honed cylinder liner has a material ratio (Mr2) determined by an intersecting line which separates the valleys from the roughness core profile in a roughness analysis of about 70% to about 90%.
8. The process for forming a cylinder liner of claim 7, wherein the internal sidewall has an internal surface consisting essentially of a reduced peak height of (Rpk) of ?0.25 a core roughness (Rk) of about 0.2 ?m to about 0.6 ?m, a reduced valley depth (Rvk) of about 1.2 ?m to about 2.5 ?m, a material ratio (Mr1) by an intersecting line which separates the protruding peaks from the roughness core profile in a roughness analysis of ?10%, and a material ratio (Mr2) determined by an intersecting line which separates the valleys from the roughness core profile in a roughness analysis of about 70% to about 90%.
9. A process for forming a cylinder liner comprising the steps of: providing a formed cylinder liner having an external sidewall with an external surface and an internal sidewall with an internal surface having a roughness; rough honing the internal surface of the cylinder liner so that the internal surface has a roughness less than the roughness of the formed cylinder liner; finish honing the internal surface of the cylinder liner so that the internal surface has a roughness less than the roughness of the rough honed cylinder liner; honing the internal surface of the cylinder liner so that the internal surface consists essentially of a reduced peak height of (Rpk) of ?0.25 ?m, a core roughness (Rk) of about 0.2 ?m to about 0.6 ?m, a reduced valley depth (Rvk) of about 1.2 ?m to about 2.5 ?m, a material ratio (Mr1) by an intersecting line which separates the protruding peaks from the roughness core profile in a roughness analysis of ?10%, and a material ratio (Mr2) determined by an intersecting line which separates the valleys from the roughness core profile in a roughness analysis of about 70% to about 90%, wherein the cylinder liner is formed of a metal or metal alloy and the internal sidewall having the internal surface is formed of the same metal or metal alloy.
10. The process for forming a cylinder liner of claim 1, wherein the internal surface of the honed cylinder liner has a cross hatch pattern formed therein.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The above, as well as other advantages of the present invention, will become readily apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment when considered in the light of the accompanying drawings in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION
(13) The following detailed description and appended drawings describe and illustrate various exemplary embodiments of the invention. The description and drawings serve to enable one skilled in the art to make and use the invention, and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention in any manner. In respect of the methods disclosed, the steps presented are exemplary in nature, and thus, the order of the steps is not necessary or critical. It is further understood that the methods disclosed herein may be employed together or separately to form a cylinder liner.
(14) A cylinder liner is formed for use in a diesel engine. The cylinder liner may be formed by known methods (
(15) The formed liner may be formed from iron, steel, a steel alloy, or another metal or metal alloy, as desired. The formed liner is then machine finished using a process according to an embodiment of the invention to form a finished cylinder liner according to another embodiment of the invention. The finished cylinder liner has a smooth roughness structure to improve the high load capacity, which means the ability to transfer the load supported by the asperities to oil film through a high percentage contact area, low roughness surface finishing and narrow and deep valleys for adhesion of lubricant. The finished cylinder liner has an external surface in an external sidewall and an internal surface of an internal sidewall formed by invention has a pattern shown in
(16) An as-cast cylinder liner or a cylinder having been machine finished or honed with a rough surface (particularly) as compared to the subsequent honing steps described hereinbelow is provided. A roughness analysis of the cylinder liner is shown in
(17) After the finish machining, rough honing, and finish/basic honing steps, a fourth step using an ultra-fine abrasive grit is pressed against the cylinder walls. A roughness analysis of the cylinder liner after the fourth step is shown in
(18) A reduced peak height (Rpk) of ?0.25 ?m. The Rpk defined as the average height of the protruding peaks above the roughness core profile.
(19) A core roughness (Rk) of about 0.2 ?m to about 0.6 ?m. The Rk defined as the depth of the roughness core profile.
(20) A reduced valley depth (Rvk) of about 1.2 ?m to about 2.5 ?m. The Rvk defined as the average depth of the profile valleys projecting through the roughness core profile.
(21) A material ratio (Mr1) defined in percentages of ?10%. The material ratio Mr1 determined by an intersecting line which separates the protruding peaks from the roughness core profile in a roughness analysis.
(22) A material ratio (Mr2) defined in percentages of about 70% to about 90%. The material ratio Mr1 determined by an intersecting line which separates the valleys from the roughness core profile in a roughness analysis.
(23) The specifications noted above, Rpk, Rk, Rvk, Mr1, and Mr2 are improved measurement methods described in ISO13565-1/-2/-3 hereby incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
(24) The cylinder liner formed using the process described hereinabove and having the specifications described herein is superior to cylinder liners known in the art and, more specifically, to cylinder liners finished using a plateau honing process, because the cylinder liner has fewer asperity peaks with shallower and more dense and uniform groove valleys. Because the cylinder liner has a lower Rpk (about 400% lower than a plateau honed liner), the cylinder liner has less run-in wear and a thinner oil film. Because the cylinder liner has a lower Rk (about 300% lower than a plateau honed liner), the cylinder liner has a more uniform oil thickness and distribution during use in an engine. Because the cylinder liner has a lower Rvk (about 200% lower than a plateau honed liner), the cylinder liner has deeper and narrower grooves resulting in better oil adhesion. During use cylinder liners formed using the process of the invention have lower hydrodynamic drag for high speeds (mid-stroke region) for low viscosity oils, and lower boundary friction (lower peak heights) avoiding metal-on-metal contact during low engine speeds.
(25) A comparison of roughness analysis graphs of a cylinder liner machined using a plateau honing process and the four-step honing process according to the present invention is shown in
(26) Inspection of the finished cylinder liner machined per the four-step process noted above results was conducted pursuant to the following: Lc (Cut off Length): 2.5 mm Lt (Traverse Length): 12.5 mm Measurement Length: 15 mm Vt (Speed of stylus): 0.5 mm/s Radius of Stylus: 5 ?m
(27) Below is a chart comparing roughness structure per ISO 13565-2 for the present invention versus known honing methods:
(28) TABLE-US-00001 Present Slide Spiral Plateau Brush Parameter Invention Honing Honing Honing Honing Rpk ?0.25 ?m ?0.30 ?m ?0.30 ?m ?1.0 ?m ?1.20 ?m Rk about 0.2 ?m- 0.3 ?m- 0.3 ?m- 1.0 ?m- 0.4 ?m- about 0.6 ?m 0.8 ?m 0.8 ?m 2.4 ?m 2.0 ?m Rvk about 1.2 ?m- 1.5 ?m- 1.5 ?m- 1.6 ?m- 1.3 ?m- about 2.8 ?m 2.5 ?m 2.5 ?m 3.8 ?m 2.5 ?m Mr1 <10% <10% <10% <10% <10% Mr2 70%-90% 65%-85% 65%-85% 65%-85% 65%-85%
(29) From the foregoing description, one ordinarily skilled in the art can easily ascertain the essential characteristics of this invention and, without departing from the spirit and scope thereof, can make various changes and modifications to the invention to adapt it to various usages and conditions.